Fairy Tales of Ireland. P.J. Lynch
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Название: Fairy Tales of Ireland

Автор: P.J. Lynch

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Детская проза

Серия:

isbn: 9780008190095

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ a great artist, and he recognised in the melancholy, extravagant, spellbinding narratives of unlettered Irish storytellers a poetry and a passion akin to his own.

      Neil Philip, 1989

       1. The Stolen Child

       W.B. Yeats

      Where dips the rocky highland

      Of Sleuth Wood in the lake,

      There lies a leafy island

      Where flapping herons wake

      The drowsy water-rats.

      There we’ve hid our fairy vats

      Full of berries,

      And of reddest stolen cherries.

      Come away, O, human child!

      To the woods and waters wild

      With a fairy hand in hand,

      For the world’s more full of weeping than

      you can understand.

      Where the wave of moonlight glosses

      The dim grey sands with light,

      Far off by farthest Rosses

      We foot it all the night,

      Weaving olden dances,

      Mingling hands, and mingling glances,

      Till the moon has taken flight;

      To and fro we leap,

      And chase the frothy bubbles,

      While the world is full of troubles.

      And is anxious in its sleep.

      Come away! O, human child!

      To the woods and waters wild,

      With a fairy hand in hand,

      For the world’s more full of weeping than

      you can understand.

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      Where the wandering water gushes

      From the hills above Glen-Car,

      In pools among the rushes,

      That scarce could bathe a star,

      We seek for slumbering trout,

      And whispering in their ears;

      We give them evil dreams,

      Leaning softly out

      From ferns that drop their tears

      Of dew on the young streams.

      Come! O, human child!

      To the woods and waters wild,

      With a fairy hand in hand,

      For the world’s more full of weeping than

      you can understand.

      Away with us, he’s going,

      The solemn-eyed;

      He’ll hear no more the lowing

      Of the calves on the warm hill-side.

      Or the kettle on the hob

      Sing peace into his breast;

      Or see the brown mice bob

      Round and round the oatmeal chest.

      For he comes, the human child,

      To the woods and waters wild,

      With a fairy hand in hand,

      For the world’s more full of weeping than

      he can understand.

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       2. The Priest’s Supper

      It is said by those who ought to understand such things, that the good people, or the fairies, are some of the angels who were turned out of heaven, and who landed on their feet in this world, while the rest of their companions, who had more sin to sink them, went down farther to a worse place. Be this as it may, there was a merry troop of the fairies, dancing and playing all manner of wild pranks, on a bright moonlight evening towards the end of September.

      The scene of their merriment was not far distant from Inchegeela, in the west of the county Cork – a poor village, although it had a barrack for soldiers; but great mountains and barren rocks, like those round about it, are enough to strike poverty into any place: however as the fairies can have everything they want for wishing, poverty does not trouble them much, and all their care is to seek out unfrequented nooks and places where it is not likely anyone will come to spoil their sport.

      On a nice green sod by the river’s side were the little fellows dancing in a ring as gaily as may be, with their red caps wagging about at every bound in the moonshine, and so light were these bounds that the lobs of dew, although they trembled under their feet, were not disturbed by their capering. Thus did they carry on their gambols, spinning round and round, and twirling and bobbing and diving, and going through all manner of figures, until one of them chirped out,

      “Cease, cease, with your drumming,

       Here’s an end to our mumming;

       By my smell

       I can tell

      A priest this way is coming!

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      And away every one of the fairies scampered off as hard as they could, concealing themselves under the green leaves of the foxglove; where, if their little red caps should happen to peep out, they would only look like its crimson bells; and more hid themselves at the shady side of stones and brambles, and others under the bank of the river, and in holes and СКАЧАТЬ